By Hall Davidson
Back by popular demand, a new version of our practical quiz by educator and multimedia guru Hall Davidson.
This is the way it happens: You're a teacher. You find the perfect
resource for a lesson you're building for your class. It's a picture
from the Internet, or a piece of a song, or a page or two from a book
in the library or from your own collection. There's no time to ask for
permission from who owns it. There isn't even time to figure who or
what exactly does own it. You use the resource anyway, and then you
worry. Have you violated copyright law? What kind of example are you
setting for students?
Or you're the principal. You visit a classroom and see an
outstanding lesson that involves a videotape, or an MP3 audio file from
the Web, or photocopies from a book you know your school doesn't own.
Do you make a comment?
The Original Intent
Were the framers of the Constitution or the barons of Old English
law able to look over your shoulder, they would be puzzled by your
doubts because all of the above uses are legal. Intellectual property
was created to promote the public good. In old England, if you wanted
to copyright a book, you gave copies to the universities. According to
Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, "The primary objective of
copyright is not to reward the labor of authors...but encourage others
to build freely upon the ideas and information conveyed by a work." In
other words, copyright was created to benefit society at large, not to
protect commercial interests.
Nowhere is this statement truer than in the educational arena. In
fact, educators fall under a special category under the law known as
"fair use." The concept, which first formally appeared in the 1976
Copyright Act, allows certain groups to use intellectual property
deemed to benefit society as a whole, e.g., in schools for
instructional use. However, it deliberately did not spell out the
details. Over the years, fair use guidelines have been created by a
number of groups-usually a combination of educators, intellectual
property holders, and other interested parties. These are not actual
laws, but widely accepted "deals" the educational community and
companies have struck and expect each other to follow.
What follows is a new version of "The Educators' Lean and Mean No
FAT Guide to Fair Use," published in Technology & Learning three
years ago. As you take the quiz on page 28, you will learn that no
matter the technology-photocopying, downloads, file sharing, video
duplication-there are times when copying is not only acceptable, it is
encouraged for the purposes of teaching and learning. And you will
learn that the rights are strongest and longest at the place where
educators need them most: in the classroom. However, schools need to
monitor and enforce fair use. If they don't, as the Los Angeles Unified
School District found out in a six-figure settlement, they may find
themselves on the losing end of a copyright question.
Know Your Limitations-and Rights
It has never been a more important time to know the rules. As a
result of laws written and passed by Congress, companies are now
creating technologies that block users from fair use of intellectual
property-for example, teachers can't pull DVD files into video
projects, and some computers now block users from inputting VCRs and
other devices. In addition to helping schools steer clear of legal
trouble, understanding the principles of fair use will allow educators
to aggressively pursue new areas where technology and learning are
ahead of the law, and to speak out when they feel their rights to
copyright material have been violated.
Now, take a quiz
that will assess your knowledge of what is allowable-and what
isn't-under fair use copyright principles and guidelines. There's also
a handy chart that outlines teachers' fair use rights and responsibilities. Good luck.
Fair to Share?
Speaking of copyright, we encourage you to photocopy this article for your
staff — just kindly tell them you found it on techLEARNING.com!
Hall Davidson is executive
director of educational services and telecommunications at KOCE-TV in
California. He has received numerous awards, including an Emmy for Best
Instructional Series.